Share This Page

Current Moon Phase

Latest Activity On Twitter

Categories

Categories

University Of Colorado Prepares For SDO Tune-Up

Image Credit: NASA

May 18, 2016 – Watching the sun is dangerous work for satellites. The instruments on these spacecraft are constantly bombarded with solar particles and intense light, not to mention the normal wear and tear from operating in space. Decades of research and engineering skill have improved protection, but scientists also use calibration flights to make sure the instruments are working correctly and providing validated data.

One such flight will be the Extreme UltraViolet (EUV) Variability Experiment, or EVE, from the University of Colorado, Boulder, to observe the sun from a NASA Black Brant IX sounding rocket at 1:02 p.m. MDT May 25 at the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico.

“The experiment’s primary goal is to provide the under-flight calibration for the SDO EVE spectrometers and the solar EUV imager aboard SDO,” said Tom Woods, the principal investigator for this mission as well as the EVE instrument on NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory, or SDO. “The calibration rocket measurements also support the calibration and validation for several other solar soft X-ray and extreme ultraviolet spectrometers and imagers on NASA solar observatories.”

The sounding rocket flight will be the eighth calibration flight of the EVE rocket instrument. After suffering a launch vehicle failure on a flight in May 2015, the instruments were recovered, refurbished and are ready for this mission, according to Woods.

The flights of the sounding rocket EVE instrument have been conducted since 2006 with the first launches to calibrate the solar EUV instrument aboard NASA’s TIMED satellite. With the launch of SDO in February 2010, unprecedented information has been received on our closest star that includes over 10 million EUV spectra and over 100 million solar images.

Woods said, “There is a lot of science and many exciting — some unexpected — results from the SDO satellite measurements. For example, while most EUV emissions increase during a solar flare, some emissions decrease, or dim, during a flare, and this dimming is providing new information about the mass loss during eruptive flare events. This calibration rocket flight contributes to those satellite measurements by providing the most accurate and updated calibration for the satellite instruments. It is invaluable for helping to understand how the satellite instruments are degrading.”

He continued, “One of the unexpected results in analysis of the instrument degradation trends, especially the spectral signature of the degradation trend for SDO EVE, is that most of the degradation in some of the EUV instruments is from oxidation of the metal foil filters and not from hydrocarbon contamination as has been the case for past satellite missions. In other words, despite the fact that SDO is a very clean spacecraft (with no significant hydrocarbon contamination), the satellite instruments still are degrading in space.”

The EVE on the 56.5-foot Black Brant IX sounding rocket is expected to fly to approximately 180 miles altitude during a 16-minute flight and provide about five minutes of solar viewing time. For Woods and his team this is all the time needed to gather data for a tune-up of the various satellite instruments.

Image Credit: LASP

The calibration rocket measurements also support the calibration and validation for several other solar soft X-ray and extreme ultraviolet spectrometers and imagers on NASA’s Thermosphere Ionosphere Mesosphere Energetics and Dynamics, Solar Radiation and Climate Experiment, Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory, ESA/NASA’s Solar and Heliospheric Observatory, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration/NASA’s Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite Program, and the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency/NASA’s Hinode.